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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1906)
page root. D.VILT EAST ORKGoXIAS, PEXDI ETON, OREGO" Wl'DXESDAV, JULY 25, 1000. EIGHT, PAGES. i. lNPEl'F.SPENl MJWSl'Al'ER. ntimhed every afternoon (except Sun- da J i, at I'emlleion. Oregon, by the EAST UKKGOSIAN rcnusiiixo CO. SUBSCRIPTION' RATM. Dally, one year, by mall J.O xlly. nix monihs. by mall S .So Itallr, three month, by mall l.-o la'.y. one moutn. by mall 50 Weekly, one year, by mail l.M Weekly, kx nion.-.a. by mall .75 Weeklv. four months, by mall oO Semi-Weekly, one year, by mall l.ftO Semi eek.y, alx montha by mall 75 8eml-Weekly, four montha, by mall... .50 he comes finally to be what he thinks he Is. That is all there Is to nuto-sugges-tlon. or suggestive therapeutics, or w hatever you may choose to call it. The medical worM is beginning to admit that, other things being equal Crooked thinking makes disease. Etmight thinking makes health. Uember Srrtpps McRae Newt Association. Ctalratro Horean. P0 Security building. Washington. 1. C Bureau, 501 Four teenth atreeu N. . relepheoa Mala I. Entered at rendleton Piatofflce as aecond clasa matter. NOTICE TO ADVShTISF.RS. Cony for adTertlalng matter to appear In the hast Oreconlan mnat be In by 4 :43 p. m of tne precetllng day ; copy for Monday's raor mnat be In by 4 :45 p. m. the preced ing Saturday. UN:OS sVJThbTD m c All nature understand and sympathizes With human passion. When the restless sea Turns In Its futile search for peace, and rises To plead and to pursue, it speaks for me. And with each desperate bil- .low's anguished fretting Tour heart must tell you, "He is not forgetting!" Love comes, nor goes, at beck or call of reason: Xor is Love silent, though it says no word. By day or night. In any clime or season, A dominating passion must be heard. So shall you hear, through Junes and through De cembers, The voice of nature saying, "He remembers!" Ella Wheeler Wilcok, In Den ver Times. SAVK THE CHILD. A beautiful motto is found at the head of the circulars of the Boys' and Girls" Aid Society of Oregon. Tt reads: "It is wiser and less expensive to save the children than to punish criminals." And It Is so easy to start a boy or girl right, if you take them Just at the flexible age, the age in which they will respond to good teaching and good example. The work of saving the children goes on quietly, unobtrusively, year after year, and the general public knows or cares very little how It is done. Waifs, orphans, street urchins are picked up by the kindly societies engaged In this work and are devel oped Into lovable, Intelligent children, who become useful men ami women Had they been left to their fate, they would have received out small pity or mercy from the world, would have become hardened, unthinking i criminals or useless vagrants, without j hope or vocation. j Pendleton has a children's home a ! society, one w hich promises to develop into a large and useful institution. Its work will not be accompanied by a flourish of trumpets, but it will pro ceed meekly and unostentatiously among the needy of the land, seeking out those who have need of care and training and placing them in good ! homes that are waiting for such. It is not a profitable business. There arc no millionaires engaged in It. It is a business which attracts but few neonle and they must have infinite patience and be fitted for the work. But it is a necessary work. The world demands it. Truly, it Is less ixrnensive to save children than to support prisons filled with hardened criminals. Pendleton should take an interest in its children's home society. It Is one of the needed institutions in the land and will grow Into a large and vital force In the community. EGGS SS EACH. The regular price of ot-trlch eggs In this country Is $5 apiece: and they are dear at that rnte, because. If one tries, to hatch them, they are liable to turn out sterile. x. Most of the eggs laid by American ostriches are hatched by means of In cubators', the breeder being able to pensunde the hen bird to yield an ex-1 tra supply by secretly pillaging the nest. Hut frequently they fall to pro duce chicks, even with the most ex pert treatment. Not long ago the Smithsonian Institute, In Washington. tried to hatch an ostrlet egg with the help of a large Brahma hen, the egg blng half hurled In a nest of sand In order that It might be covered satis factorily; but this little scientific ex per'ment did not turn out a success. When an ostrich egg does not hatch It Is blown, the shell being worth something for nn ornament. But thy operation has to be performed with no little cauflon. because the egg Is lia ble to explode In the process. If Its contents hnve deteriorated to some extent. o tc speak, gases will have de veloped which are liable to cause the shell to burst as socn as It la weaken ed In iinv part, and to throw the frag ment with great force In all direc tions. Men have been quite badly hurt hy accidents of the kind, e Though ostrich eggs may be dear at $5. it is much better to buy the do mestic product than to Import them. A South African egg Is an exceedingly expensive luxury, inasmuch as It has to pav an export duty of $123. This dtitv of $125 per etn? Is Imposed to prevent the shl;'.ment of ostrich eg! to othfr parts of the world. South Africa being "anxious to keep the profitable business of cstrlch breeding to itself as much ns possible. In South Africa, however, one can h'tv ostrich t-ziz comparatively cheap, and there they are even ied to som. extent for cooking. Tt Is specially fashionable to emplov them In the manufacture of Christmas puddings to which thev are supposed to lend peculiarly delicious flavor. Xew Yrnk World. iexvoi. When .earth's last scandal Is printed and the forms are batered and pled. When the newest muckheap has crum bled and the oldest raker has died We shall .rest, and. faith, we shall need It lie down for an a-on or two, Till' Saint Teddy, the master critic, shall find us something to do. And their of a those that were good shall be happy: they shall sit on a cloud , and rail At the swing of the stars in courses and the curves comet's tall Thomas and David and I'pton, Sam- mie and Ida and Hay. They shall censure and kick and cavil. and never be tired n day. And only Saint Teddy shall praise us and only Saint Teddy shall blame; And no one shall kick for money, and no one shall kick for fame, But Just for the Joy of the kicking; and each shall be perfectly free To change nnd arrange creation ns he thinks that it aaght to he. Puck. FAIRBANKS' H K WAGOX. WORRY MAKES DISEASE. I Do you remember the old-style al manac of your boyhood? Perhaps you can see It, in your mind's eye, occupy ing Its place of honor beside the kitchen stove a household oracle, often consulted, says the Xews-Sclm-Itar. And do you remember how you, the boy, after puzzling over the zodiac which invariably appeared on the sec ond page, and laughing for the hun dredth time at the feeble Jokes, began to read about the symptoms of disease for which the exploited patent Viedl clne was a panacea? For Instance: You read that "shortness of b eath and palpitation of the heart after vig orous exercise" was a symptom of heart disease. Sure. You had the symptoms. And for almost every ill described you could find a correspond ing diagnosis. Only you did not worry about It much. And In that respect you dif fered from the adult who g-ets a like Idea from reading the advertisements of cure-alls and testimonials of mar velous recovery. "As the man thlnketh In his heart so Is he." A man gets it Into his head that his heart does not work Just right. He worries about It. Worry prevents sleep. It interferes with digestion. There is lack of nourishment, de rangement. Each condition aggra vates the other. The man Is "run down." He is really sick. And In the end there Is a case of functional dif ficulty. The man has real trouble with his heart and other organs. He half brought it about by wrong think lng. "As a man thlnketh In his heart so Is he." There Is a profound truth in the scripture. He who thinks heart dlsaese or liver trouble or stomach derangement will get these troubles. Any physician will tell you so.' And, In large measure, the canverse Is true. He who thinks he Is In health and persists In so thinking, will be In health. He says to himself over and over: "I am strong and vigorous." He keeps on saying that, and by the marvelous power of mind over matter THE IDEAL CITY. Professor Shaw of Vassar college, thus defines the Ideal city of the 20th century. There is much of sense in these simple specifications, which ap ply to any town. A city with clean streets, well sprinkled streets, streets lined with well-cared for shade trees. Streets and roads that are freed from billboards. Vacant lots now ustd as dumping places turned into attractive squares. Benches along the roadside for weary pedestrians. Backyards that are visions of beau ty instead of eyesores. Window boxes that brighten -dull walls and recreation piers on the banks of the river. All of these make for patriotism as well as for civic beauty and righteous ness. If it is true that the boy without a playground is father to the man with out a Job, we may well shrink from looking into the future. Boys and girls are turned loose on the street; mischief, crime and vice result, and when these conditions become un bearable, we, turn to the curfew as a negative means of dealing with condi tions that ought never to have existed. AMERICAN COCKT IX CHINA. The new law passed at the recent i"t.inn of congress creating a United St it' s court in China, greatlv dimin ishes the Judicial flowers of Ameri can consuls In that country. Under the new law the consuls will only have lurisdictlon over small cases of rela tively little siciilficanee, and even In these th-1 rltrht of appeal to the courl whose establishment is thus contem plated Is guaranteed. Heretofore the consuls have had full Jurisdiction over American cases arising In China: that in all cases of Judicial proceedings. The court is to hold sessions, at Canton, Tientsin and Hankow at stat ed periods, at least once annually. The law gives the consuls 'the4 same urlsdlctlnn ns they have now In civil cases where the value of property in- olved do-s not exceed jsnn n gold. and In criminal cases where the pun- ?hment for the offense charged can not exceed by law a $100 fine or 60 days' imprisonment, or both: but ap- eals go to the district court estab shed by the act, and may go from there to the supreme court of the United States. The law gives this new court In China supervisory control over the discharge by consuls and vice consuk of the duties prescribed by the laws of the United States relating to the estates of decedents in China. The chilling dignity that enshrouds Vice President Fairbanks hns been made the theme of countless Jokes hy the nntlon's lawmakers. This Is the latest: The vice president. Fairbanks, came down Fifteenth street. Washington, the other day in his finest carriage. He met representative nrownlow who was walking. "Oct In. Brown low," aid the vice president, "and will take you to the capltol." Brown low hopped In. They chatted until the corner of Fifteenth and K streets, where the vice president halted the carriage In order to go into a store He left Brownlow In the carriage, Two or three representatives walking to the capltol, came along and found Hrownlow thert. sitting In state. "HI, nrownlow." said one of them, "how bout this' When did you get a turn out like that and what are you doing here?" "Xothlng." Brownlow replied. Xothlng, at all. merely getting a free Ide In the Ice wagon." winsT. Hour after hour the cards were fairly . shuffled And fairly dealt, but still I got no hand; The morning came, and with ft mind unruffled I only said: "I do not understand." Life Is a game of whist. From unseen sources The cards are shuffled and the hands are dealt: Blind are our efforts to control the forces That, though unseen, are no less strongly felt. I do not like the way the cards are shuffled, But yet I like the game and want to Play: And through the long, long night will I unruffled Play whatI get until the break day. Eugene Ware. New York city Imports are growing rapidly. The city Is now receiving for elgn goods at the rate of $736,000,000 a year. Bliiif' 111 '-x Tlzv?j Summer Reading If you -re thinking of going to the mountains or to the coast to escape the heat, you will want some light reading matter. We have a complete line of paper covered books, all the leading maga. zlnes, and the best of popular book! of fiction. We also have the TABARD INN LIBRARY, Ask us about It FRAZIER'S BOOK STORE Helen, thy beauty Is to me Like those Nleoan barks of yore That pentlv o'er a perfumed sea The wearv, wnyworne wnnderer bore To his own native shore. On desperate seas lonir wont to roam Thy hvaclnth hair, thy classic face. The Xaiad airs, have brought me home To the glory th.it was Greere And the grandeur that was Home. Lo. In yon brilliant window niche How statuelike I see thee stand. The agate lamp within thy hand! Ah. Psyche, from the regions which Are Holy Land! Edgar Allen Poe. THE nI.L OF FAME. President Roosevelt has four per sonal saddle horses. He rides them on (ilternate days. Colonel Henry P. McCain, attached to the staff of the military secretary Is the best golf plaver In the army. Wallace Irwin, the poet, and Will Irwin, the writer, are twins, and look It. Each thinks the other Is a genius. which Is brotherly. Galllard Hunt, chief of the passport division of the state department writes histories and biographies when he Isn't busiy writing passports. . P. V. De Graw. fourth assistant postmaster general, Is an expert tele graph operator. So Is Robert J. Wynne, formev postmaster general and now consul general to London, John E. Wllkle, chief of the secret service, should be, hy rights, a most mvsterlous person. Instead, he looks like a prosperous broker, smokes pipe, Is president of the Columbia Oolf club, tells a good story and, when h isn't busy running down counterfeit ers, struggles valiantly with Colone Boev and usually loses, It may he remarked In passing. Saturday Eve nlng Post. CLOCKS AXD KISSES. Tell me who first Invented the clocks, Classing the hours nnd the minutes In flocks. That was some shivering, sowerful man! - Deep Into midnight his reveries ran While he counted the nibbling of mice round the hall Ar.d the notes of the deathwatch which ticked In the wall. Tell me who first Invented a kiss. Oh, that was, some smiling youth mouth full of bliss! It kissed without thinking, and still kissed away 'Twas nil In the beautiful, fresh month of May. Up from the earth the young blossoms sprang: The sunbeams were shining, the mer ry birds sang. Helnrlch Heine, HAWAIIAN SUGAR CROP. Hawaii's sugar crop of this yenr I estimated at Honolulu to reach 400 000 tons, falling under the record crop of last year. After next August It I said that no more Hawaiian sugar win be sent around South America to market. It is said that all of the next year's crop destined for tho Atlantic seaboard will go by the Tchuantepec route. 1IEI.EX. -EXPELS e BL00D HUMORS Itching, disfiguring eruptions, rashes, boils, etc., as well as pimples, black-heads and rough, scaly skins, show the presence of some irritating humor in the blood. These acids and humors with which the blood is filled are being constantly thrown off through the pores and glands, and the skin is kept in a feverish, diseased and unsightly condition. Nothing applied externally can change the condition of the blood or prevent the outflow of poisons and acids ; only constitutional treatment can do this. The countless washes, salves, lotions, etc., that are used cannot reach the humor-laden blood and are, therefore, useless, except for the temporary comfort and clean liness they afford. The acid poison in the blood, which is the cause of the trouble, must be removed before a cure can bo effected.- S. S. S. is a real blood purifier, possessing all the requirements to neutralize and remove the humor from the circulation. It completely eradicates every trace of the poison and restores this vital fluid to its natural state of purity S. S. S. cools the acid-heated blood so that instead of pouring ont acrid matter on the skin it feeds and nourishes it with health-sustaining properties, and the eruptions and diseases of the skin pass away. Book on Skin Diseases and medical advice free. ni SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CAm Bingham Springs THE POPULAR BLUE MOUNTAIN RESORT. Bingham Springs Hotel, beautifully located In the heart of the Blua mountains. The Umatilla river flows past the hotel, making an Ideal place for the lover of trout fishing. On all aide rise the tree-clad mountains, making Bingham Springs one of the coolest and most restful resorts In Oregon, The Hotel maintains Its own herd of cows, furnishing an abundance of milk and cream for Its guests. Our garden furnishes an abundance of fresh vegetables for the table. We spare no pains to add to the comfort or pleasure of our guests. Our swimming pool Is one of our most popular features. Rates, $2.00 and $2.50 a day. $15.00 a week for one, or$25.00 for two. Table bonrd, $8.00 a week to campers. Camping privileges $1.50 each per week. This Includes all privileges of the grounds. Including the use of the swimming pool. Address, M. E. FOLET, Bingham Springs. Gibbon Postofflce, Oregon. FOR ALL DtlLDING PURPOSES we can supply either private In vlduals or regular contractors with any quantity of Lumber of su rlor quality. We receive frequent consign ments of the choicest hard Lumbr, free from knots, warplnrs and Imper fections, and we have It iut to deal, ble and useful lengths ready f the carpenters to handle. Trices ru low. Qur "ties rule high. Oregon Lumber Yard NEAR COURT HOUSE. 'Phono Slain 8. Pendleton. Oivx'mi, i RUSSIAN RI D TAPE. Into A freight stenmer once came Marinpul, a port on the sea of Azov. which had among Its cargo 100 pieces of machinery numbered M from 1 to 100. When the pieces were unloaded It was found that Xo. 87 was missing, but two pieces numbered 88 showed thai there had been an error, the final tally being correct. But the customs officials did not take tnis view of the matter, the port being 111 need of funds, so they fined the ship 500 rublts for being short of cargo per manifest, namelv Xo. 87. and 10)0 rubles for smuggling having two nieces numbered 88, when the manifest called for but one. Archbishop Ireland has accepted an appointment as aide de camp on the stuff of Commander In Chief James Tanner and will ride In his carriage In the Grand Army parade at Minneap olis on August 15. Archbishop Ire land served In the civil war as chap lain of .the Fifth Minnesota regiment. Accurate tab has been kept on Baron Itosen, the Russian ambassa dor, since he nrrlved In Washington and nobody ever saw him without a cigar In his mouth or In his hand, Just ready to put Into his mouth, except when he was at a state function dining, and then he always smokes between courses. SUPREME COURT FIXDIXGS. Change of Business C. E. BOWLSHY, HAS PURCHASED THE BUSINESS OF t. IIARDWICK, PAWNBROKER AXD MONEY I.OAXER. He would like to have all Ills friends call ami see tilm In the Bowman building, 119 Railroad street. Musical Instrnmentn, bicycles, guns and all k I nils of nrcoml hnml Instruments bought and sold. Diamonds a specialty. Money loaned on all articles) of value. C. E. BOWLSBY Byers' Best Flour Is mad from the choicest wheat that grcva. Good bread aured w cn 3YL1R8' BEST FLOUR Is ussd. Bran, Shorts, Rolled Bcrley always a band. Is a- Bteam PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. 8. BYERS. Prorrietor. Put. Wings to Your Work An electric motor will do mor and better work than any other power that you can use. The economy of Its Is r. demonat -a od fact. If you want good, quick work at a minimum of cost you want an electrlo motor. We will be pleased to give you or prices and to furnish complete esti mate to suit your needs. Northwestern Gas and Electric Co. CORNER COURT AJTD GARDEN 8T Jmltre Ellis nnd .Judge Rinon Both Afflrmol. Salem, July 23. The state of Ore gon excel Haseom Olasse against Her man Frost, appellant's appeal from Grant county, Judge Eakln, Is affirm ed by Judge Bean. Contempt proced urc Instituted by the state upon the relation of Olaw! agnlnst Frost for violation of decrees of this court ren dered hy a decision of 1893 In which Is entitled the relator's prior right to BO Inches of water In Squaw creek, Wheeler county, and restraining the defendant from Interfering with the water. Sarah C. Jennings and George A. Jennings against Oregon Lnnd Wa ter company, appellant, appeal from Morrow county; W. R. Ellis, Judge; affirmed by Judge Rean. Action to recover damages for breach of con tract for the sale of real estate In the town of Irrlgon. The contract called for the building of a hotel nccordlng to certain specifications. The jury In the lower court returned damages to plaintiffs In the sum of 13200, from which Judgment defendant appenled. Tho Warner Valley Stock company against J. L. Morrow, defendant and appellant, appeal from Lake county; H. L. Benson, Judge; affirmed by Judge Hnlley. Special from Judgment In favor of thn plaintiff In an action to recover real property In Lake county. Read the East Oregontan. Mrs. Sawtelle's Turkish Bath Parlors BOTII LADIES AND GENTLiJMEN IT -A TED. TURKISH BATHS. ELECTRIC BATHS, MASSAGE COMPLETE, SALT GLOW, LADIES' HOURS 8:30 a. m. to :30 ant. GENTS' IIOU-. :i0 p. m. to 7 a. tendant. PARLOR FOMENTA. ION, Scientific Chiropodist ! anoe. P- attend- m with lady attend , with gentleman .t. tVMl DUAIKHTIU liAUNDRY. PHONE RED 3801. RESIDENCE 'PHONiS RED 1101. Insure with companies that pay dollar for dollar. All of our companies are doing It Frank B. Clopton & Co. Represent thr following comoanlsar. London & Lanccthlre Firs Insurance C North British 4c Mercantile la, one i Royal Insurance Co. New York Underwriters' Agenoj Alliance Assurance Co. LEGAL BLANKS .t alogoe of them. A fall supply always kept in stock.